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Пікірлер
@aa3865
@aa3865 18 күн бұрын
zaddy 😋
@rowan4327
@rowan4327 27 күн бұрын
Now I want to swim in roofing tar to see what it is like! Great video.
@GeorgeSawtooth
@GeorgeSawtooth 2 ай бұрын
They grow pretty much wild on the Colorado prairie if there is even an intermittent water source. We grew them on the farm and also had an American elm which was just a beautiful and grand tree and much more beautiful than a Siberian elm. Unfortunately, our American elm succumbed to Dutch elm disease. Not sure why such a beautiful tree like an American elm can't be resistant to a disease while a lesser species like the Siberian continues to thrive uninhibited!
@djs2356
@djs2356 3 ай бұрын
so what's usually called 'Douglas Fir' is not really a fir. Instead it is in the pine family???
@justinwilliams2591
@justinwilliams2591 2 ай бұрын
Fir, Spruce, Pine, Larfh, Cedar, etc are all in the Pine family Pineceae Fir has the Genus: Abies, Douglas fir has the genus: Psuedotsuga Pine has the genus: Pinus , spruce genus: Picea
@glenncordova4027
@glenncordova4027 3 ай бұрын
I have a slippery elm that planted itself in my front yard. I live in Albuquerque, New Mexico, about 1000 miles from the next closest slippery elm. I wish I knew how it got here. Unfortunately it is very close to my house so I let it grow to about 20 feet then cut it to the ground and then let it grow up again. There have been Atlas moths feeding and breeding in it. Beautiful. ❤️
@Livrazapam
@Livrazapam 3 ай бұрын
Watching this three hours before a soil exam😅 this was so helpful!
@lyn-amy2625
@lyn-amy2625 3 ай бұрын
This is actually so cool
@matthewtaylor2185
@matthewtaylor2185 4 ай бұрын
I think i just found some of these in Kentucky. I just cut some standing dead for firewood. I have trees with bark like that all around me, i thought there were gum trees.
@aa3865
@aa3865 4 ай бұрын
my dream man
@aa3865
@aa3865 4 ай бұрын
He’s so hot
@kevinlabbe8391
@kevinlabbe8391 4 ай бұрын
Love the James Galway music
@kevinlabbe8391
@kevinlabbe8391 4 ай бұрын
Correct your explanation of helicopter flight to “auto gyration”. Helicopter flight is vertical flight upward with power to the rotor. A spinning rotor with no power slows decent by rotating fast. The Maple leaf seed has a leading edge and trailing like an airplane wing. Wings create lift by creating negative pressure on the top and positive pressure on the bottom. If center of gravity is stable, the angle of attack will be constant and slow the decent. 😮😵‍💫😇
@quarrellousquaker
@quarrellousquaker 5 ай бұрын
What are the major differences between the Engelmann & Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis)? I have a spruce in my yard that I can't tell is the former or the latter.
@nooriaalihassani
@nooriaalihassani 6 ай бұрын
Very helpful, thanks. Could you please explain why the meniscus was below the 0 line and why the same meniscus was below the line of 7 in Serological pipitte? the meniscus should not be up the line?
@Staingo_Jenkins
@Staingo_Jenkins 6 ай бұрын
I wanted to brush up on limnology. Im very glad this information is available online for free. But I can't lie though. I was cackling at the first 10 seconds of the video. Totally felt like a cold open for a Check It Out! sketch lol.
@lucindawilson5510
@lucindawilson5510 6 ай бұрын
thank you
@stephenkutney9626
@stephenkutney9626 6 ай бұрын
Will Swamp White Oak grow in upstate New York?
@dicksyphilis3914
@dicksyphilis3914 7 ай бұрын
I thought about planting one of these beautiful trees, but they are incredibly invasive in central Indiana. I don’t dare now. My tree collection can live without it.
@lynnglidewell7367
@lynnglidewell7367 7 ай бұрын
I think I have one which has sprung to life just Spring 2024. It is on my fence line so I assume the Birds planted it in their droppings. It's just a small seedling about 4 inches tall at this point but the leaves are exactly as shown in this video. Three pointed lobes with two rounded ones at the bottom. The leaves on stem are parallel not alternating. I think I got lucky! I'll move it to a better location in late Fall.
@ghewins
@ghewins 7 ай бұрын
Ironwood is a better name, so as to avoid confusion with the hop hornbeam
@dicksyphilis3914
@dicksyphilis3914 7 ай бұрын
I have a few of these growing near volunteer black walnut. I hate to kill any tree. I’m going to let nature take its course.
@dicksyphilis3914
@dicksyphilis3914 7 ай бұрын
Why plant one of these? They grow everywhere like weeds.
@kurtschmidt5005
@kurtschmidt5005 7 ай бұрын
Will it grow in zone 8???
@dicksyphilis3914
@dicksyphilis3914 7 ай бұрын
I like big trees. I’m going to figure out what this tree needs and plant a few of them.
@jonasbulota7789
@jonasbulota7789 7 ай бұрын
There's a small amount of them growing in Lithuania, a very rare and beautiful tree.
@samthedude2025
@samthedude2025 7 ай бұрын
Bro.
@jeffisaliar
@jeffisaliar 7 ай бұрын
Pot leaf😂
@jrudymorganclark2072
@jrudymorganclark2072 7 ай бұрын
Mine is 1 meter tall and I can't wait until it grows bigger.
@arthurix1705
@arthurix1705 7 ай бұрын
It's not a hammamelidaceae, it's an altingiaceae 😊
@TheGuruNetOn
@TheGuruNetOn 8 ай бұрын
maple genetic algorithm to generate best flying wing by natural selection.
@eugenedeckard8714
@eugenedeckard8714 8 ай бұрын
It's the state tree of Idaho.😉
@comment919
@comment919 8 ай бұрын
Do you hear the sound of aspen leaves moving to the wind in the background? So beautiful …
@sajithomas2158
@sajithomas2158 8 ай бұрын
Very scholarly and illuminating lecture
@peaceosahon8423
@peaceosahon8423 8 ай бұрын
The container used also has its own mass. How do you then calculate the actual mass of the substance??
@Michael-tg7cp
@Michael-tg7cp 4 ай бұрын
That is what the tare function does. it zeros the mass of the weigh boat so it only reads the mass of the compound
@anavaladez3503
@anavaladez3503 8 ай бұрын
👏🏼🥹
@timmillan6701
@timmillan6701 9 ай бұрын
Love bald cypress, and also love the related Taxodium mucronatum from far south Texas and Mexico. I was very excited to see that a breeding program had produced a hybrid between the two. It is called ‘La Nana’, and I found it online. I will put mine in the ground this month
@HeyYouSA
@HeyYouSA 9 ай бұрын
Just got mine in the ground. See you in a couple hundred years!
@noelalexisshaw-nas-noz5142
@noelalexisshaw-nas-noz5142 9 ай бұрын
🤔 SO......This Is Watt Happens In Our Skyes Then 🤐 The Plasma Luminaries(Energy), Interact Ova Distance With Each Other.....Creating Vortices Within, ALTERNATING FLAT, STACKED, ATMOSPHERIC LAYERS Ova A "Fixed, Level, Non Rotating Earth".....With The Luminaries Emananting/Resonating From POLE-AIR-REGIONS (NOT Top & Bottom Of A BS Ball)....& Flowing/Following A "Circuit Board" 🤐.....Fkin (HE)BREWERS & Their BS & Misdirection 🤦🤦🤦🤦😘
@benquinneyiii7941
@benquinneyiii7941 10 ай бұрын
Take that Aristotle
@upyoursassmonkey
@upyoursassmonkey 10 ай бұрын
For some reason it seems that ovoid mushrooms love the wood from these trees, so its got that going for it.
@creatednordestroyed5339
@creatednordestroyed5339 10 ай бұрын
Awesome!
@goldistocks609
@goldistocks609 10 ай бұрын
Their root systems are shallow and very vigorous and will outcompete anything you try to plant underneath. When they get big they take up a ton of water. They also constantly drop pine cones, twigs, drip sap, and needles that make the surrounding ground acidic. They are a bit of a pain to deal with. I don’t recommend planting them unless you have a ton of room.
@demetramckevitt5053
@demetramckevitt5053 10 ай бұрын
'Promo SM'
@glennv.graafeiland2629
@glennv.graafeiland2629 11 ай бұрын
Did anything in the syntax change since this was developed? I typed the code for the landsat app from the video and when I press run nothing happens. I checked the code multiple times to make sure there are no mistakes.. Thanks a lot!
@afrinzaidi5327
@afrinzaidi5327 11 ай бұрын
will it remove terrain shadow (like mountain shadow) also ?? Also, can I use this code in the case of Landsat and Sentinel?
@manuc5353
@manuc5353 11 ай бұрын
I don't know why there are so few views. This is a brilliant explanation of the teemite mound mechanism contrary to popular belief!
@seanyoung4574
@seanyoung4574 Жыл бұрын
cool
@rhigel2269
@rhigel2269 Жыл бұрын
All: I am going to tell all you poor researchers again, that Tulip trees were not used for ship masts, and rarely, if ever obtained the height of 200 feet in the past. England used the Eastern White Pines of the New England colonies for ship masts. For all you that claim there are 200 feet trees, prove it. In North Carolina there is a virgin forest, Joyce Kilmer forest, never, logged, known for the large Tulip trees. However, not one is close to 200 feet tall, though many are old mature specimens of 8 feet in diameter. Thomas Jefferson planted two Tulip trees next to his mansion, Monticello. Today both trees are cut down because their trunks were hollow. They were mature giant specimens, but either was close to 200 feet tall. One of Cornelis Vanderbilt's grandson built 'The Biltmore Mansion' near Asheville, North Carolina. He had perhaps fifty Tulip trees planted along the U shaped driveway in the front of the mansion. After 100 years the trees were removed. None of the trees grew much past 100 feet. There is organization or society that tracks the different States champion trees by species as well as the States themselves tracking all their champion trees species. Sorry, but tulip trees are not growing close to 200 feet tall. Get your tape measures and your math skills ready to check all these examples, that some individuals are writing as 200 feet. And check the lumber books that reference what Tulip (yellow poplar wood) trees are really used. Then read about Eastern White Pine, the real trees used for ship masts.
@palmettoms9886
@palmettoms9886 7 ай бұрын
The tallest currently known Tulip Poplar (last I checked) is in the Smoky Mountains and is 191ft probably a bit taller now if still doing well. There were definitely 200ft + Tulip Poplar as described by early naturalist to North America. Eastern forests were quite literally scraped off the map and most all of these giant trees across many species destroyed. If one could go back in time the environment would be almost unrecognizable to most and one could bear witness to many species of trees at incredible sizes not seen today. I wouldn’t doubt there are still a few 200ft+ hidden throughout the hills and hollers here in the South..but certainly not the norm nowadays or else we’d have a few known recorded examples of this. Instead of saying heights of 200ft or more being common I’d definitely say heights of 100ft more are common as I know of many 100ft+ Tulip Poplar just here in my area of Northeast Mississippi. The Southern Appalachians and it’s foothills which reach all the way to Northeast Mississippi here are where most optimal growth for the species is found. Many young trees here are often at 100ft in only around 30 years old. As far as ship masts and what was used I doubt it would be Tulip poplar and not sure but Eastern White Pine definitely sounds more plausible. In another 50-100 years if environments are still stable enough we should definitely see many of the trees today getting old and attaining the 200ft threshold.